Lending a helping hand in Angel Meadow
Boys' rest and coffee room, 1883 |
In 1881 it was taken over by the Manchester Refuge and turned into the 'Boys’ Rest and Coffee Room'. It was opened on the 26 October by Mr Henry Lee, MP. The object of this branch was to provide temporary aid to lads who frequented the common lodging houses of the district and give them safe accommodation for the night. During the day it was used as a coffee house. Most nights every one of the 18 beds was used by the boys, accounting for around 540 a month.
Ragged child under
the stairs
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“The lowest, most filthy, most unhealthy and most wicked locality in Manchester is called, singularly enough, ‘Angel-meadow.”At the turn of the century the district was overflowing with lodging houses of the lowest and cheapest type. These were filled with boys from the streets earning a precarious living. For many youths who were too old for the main Central Refuge, or had no desire to enter the home, the Boys’ Rest provided a clean, respectable lodging place. It saved "many a lad from the downward path" (Taken from 'Making Rough Places Plain' by William Edmondson, 1920).
A lovely old picture and very informative post - thank you. But the building was not on Charter Street - it was at the bottom of Angel Street at St Michael's Place. It can be seen on the 1891 Town Plan and I think it was knocked down in 1927. Here is a link to photograph of it in 1908;
ReplyDeletehttp://www.friends-of-angel-meadow.org/USERIMAGES/Angel%20St.jpg
Also Lowry sketched the site of it (it was gone by the 1930's and is the derelict site towards the middle left of the picture);
http://www.friends-of-angel-meadow.org/USERIMAGES/L.S%20Lowry%20Study%20for%20Angel%20Meadow.jpg
Thank you for this information and the links. Really useful to know!
DeleteSt Michaels Square is where my great grand parents lived for many years so surely they knew this place and my grandmother was born there so this is like a small time portal into the past... thanks for sharing..
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